The top of the stand includes a camera mounting screw point. Two additional clips are included in the box, which are around twice as tall as the ones pre-attached to the stand. Small detachable clips you can feed cables through and can slide up and down the stand neck to your desired position. The stand neck is die-cast aluminium and includes an adjustable ‘RapidRoute’ cable management system. It can be replaced by an alternative VESA 100 compatible solution, if preferred. Beneath this there are some ventilation holes, with the stand attaching centrally via 100 x 100mm VESA. The rear of the monitor is mainly matte black plastic, with a glossy black plastic Corsair Sails logo at the top. Which allows you to keep a reasonable distance between your eyes and the screen unless your desk is quite shallow. So the stand is quite hefty and takes up a fair bit of desk space, though the screen isn’t forced as close to the face as some large stand designs. The total depth of the monitor including stand is ~316mm (12.44 inches), with the screen ~75mm (3 inches) back from the front edge of the stand. At lowest stand height the screen clears the desk by ~70mm (2.76 inches) with the top of the screen ~500mm (19.66 inches) above the desk. ![]() The included stand offers tilt (5° forwards, 20° backwards), swivel (30° left, 30° right) and height adjustment (110mm or 4.33 inches). It has more central bulk, towards the stand attachment point. The video below runs through the OSD as well as Corsair’s iCUE software which can be used to control it.įrom the side the screen is slender at thinnest point, ~17mm (0.67 inches). This glows a gentle white when the monitor is switched on (can be disabled in the OSD) or dark orange when signal to the system is lost and it enters a low power state. There’s a dedicated power button above the joystick, with a power indicator LED towards the right side of the bottom bezel. The OSD (On Screen Display) is controlled by a joystick at the rear of the monitor, towards the right side as viewed from the front. The large screen naturally dominates from the front, with a very light matte anti-glare finish – both factors are explored deeper into the review. Including both components, the bezels are ~10mm (0.39 inches). The top and side bezels are dual-stage with a slim panel border flush with the rest of the screen and a slender hard plastic outer part. It’s reasonably slim at ~18mm (0.71 inches) with just a sliver of panel border visible. The bottom bezel is black with a blended Corsair Sails logo in the middle. This model has one of the heftiest and most solid stands we’ve come across on a monitor, almost like this thing is part monitor part military aircraft. This base and the neck of the stand are die-cast aluminium with a dark grey finish, giving a weighty and premium feel to things. The monitor has a unique look, accentuated by the distinctively styled stand base. Some of the key ‘talking points’ for this monitor have been highlighted in blue below, for your reading convenience. A 1ms grey to grey response time is specified, but as usual approach with caution. This supports true 8-bit colour, a 165Hz refresh rate and 2560 x 1440 (WQHD) resolution. The monitor is based around a 32” AU Optronics AHVA (Advanced Hyper-Viewing Angle) IPS-type panel. We put this model through its paces in our usual testing suite. It provides additional attractive features such as Adaptive-Sync (including AMD FreeSync Premium), a generous colour gamut and HDR10 support via VESA DisplayHDR 400. It offers a 32” screen size, IPS (In-Plane Switching) type panel and 165Hz refresh rate. The monitor is designed for an immersive but responsive gaming experience, whilst providing good capability for productivity-oriented tasks as well. The 32QHD165 marks their first foray into the world of gaming monitors as part of their XENEON sub-brand. Corsair are best known for their gaming peripherals, PCs and components.
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